Saturday, March 16, 2013

Meditate...the subtle, slow way to strengthen your will & sharpen your skill..!

This morning, like every morning, I sat cross-legged on a cushion on the floor, rested my hands on my knees, closed my eyes, and did nothing but breathe for 20 minutes.
People say the hardest part about meditating is finding the time to meditate. This makes sense: who these days has time to do nothing? It's hard to justify.

Meditation brings many benefits:
It refreshes us.....helps us settle into what's happening now....makes us wiser and gentler,
helps us cope in a world that overloads us with information and communication, and more.
But if you're still looking for a business case to justify spending time meditating, try this one:
Meditation makes you more productive.
How? By increasing your capacity to resist "distracting urges".

Research shows that an ability to resist urges will improve your relationships, increase your dependability, and raise your performance. If you can resist your urges, you can make better, more thoughtful decisions. You can be more intentional about what you do and how you do it.
Our ability to resist an impulse determines our success in learning a new behavior or changing an old habit. It's probably the single most important skill for our growth and development.
As it turns out, that's one of the things meditation teaches us. It's also one of the hardest to learn.
When I sat down to meditate this morning, relaxing a little more with each out-breath, I was successful in letting all my concerns drift away. My mind was truly empty of everything that had concerned it before I sat. Everything except the flow of my breath. My body felt blissful and I was at peace.
For about four seconds only...!!
Within a breath or two of emptying my mind, thoughts came flooding in — nature abhors a vacuum. I felt an itch on my face and wanted to scratch it. A great title for my next book popped into my head and I wanted to write it down before I forgot it. I thought of at least four phone calls I wanted to make and one difficult conversation I was going to have later that day. I became anxious, knowing I only had a few hours of writing time. What was I doing just sitting here? I wanted to open my eyes and look at how much time was left on my countdown timer. I heard my kids fighting in the other room and wanted to intervene.
Here's the key though: I wanted to do all those things, but I didn't do them. Instead, every time I had one of those thoughts, I brought my attention back to my breath.
Sometimes, not following through on something you want to do is a problem, like not writing that proposal you've been procrastinating on or not having that difficult conversation you've been avoiding.
But other times, the problem is that you do follow through on something you don't want to do. Like speaking instead of listening or playing politics instead of rising above them.
Meditation teaches us to resist the urge of that counterproductive follow through.
And while I've often noted that it's easier and more reliable to create an environment that supports your goals than it is to depend on willpower, sometimes, we do need to rely on plain, old-fashioned, self-control.
For example, when you want to blurt something out in a meeting but know you'd be better off listening. Or when you want to buy or sell a stock based on your emotions when the fundamentals and your analysis suggest a different action. Or when you want to check email every three minutes instead of focusing on the task at hand.
Meditating daily will strengthen your willpower muscle. Your urges won't disappear, but you will be better equipped to manage them. And you will have experience that proves to you that the urge is only a suggestion. You are in control.
Does that mean you never follow an urge? Of course not. Urges hold useful information. If you're hungry, it may be a good indication that you need to eat. But it also may be an indication that you're bored or struggling with a difficult piece of work. Meditation gives you practice having power over your urges so you can make intentional choices about which to follow and which to let pass.
So how do you do it? If you're just starting, keep it very simple.

Sit with your back straight enough that your breathing is comfortable — on a chair or a cushion on the floor — and set a timer for however many minutes you want to meditate. Once you start the timer, close your eyes, relax, and don't move except to breathe, until the timer goes off. Focus on your breath going in and out. Every time you have a thought or an urge, notice it and bring yourself back to your breath.
That's it. Simple but challenging. Try it — today — for five minutes. And then try it again tomorrow.

This morning, after my meditation, I went to my home office to start writing. A few minutes later, Sophia, my seven-year-old, came in and told me the kitchen was flooded. Apparently Daniel, my five-year-old, filled a glass of water and neglected to turn off the tap. Oops.

In that moment, I wanted to scream at both Daniel and Sophia. But my practice countered that urge. I took a breath. Then, together, we went into action mode. We got every towel in the house — and a couple of blankets — and mopped it all up, laughing the whole time. When we were done soaking up the water, we talked about what happened. Finally, we all walked together to our downstairs neighbors and took responsibility for the flood, apologized, and asked if we could help them clean up the mess.
After that, I had lost an hour of writing. If I was going to meet my deadline, I needed to be super-productive. So I ate a quick snack and then ignored every distracting urge I had for two hours — no email, no phone calls, no cute Youtube videos — until I finished my piece, which I did with 30 minutes to spare.
Who says meditation is a waste of time?
-By Peter Bregman.

28 comments:

ALBELA HOUSE said...

R/Ilango Sir,Namaste n Namaskaar 2 all reader's.

venkatapathy l said...

Namaste Ilango Sir

I can miss this blog for a whole week. But Saturday I must sit with you chewing your offering for hours. This I consider as mu meditative work.

Love and regards,

LV

Bhushan said...

Thank You Gurudev

Dinesh Rishi said...

Pranaam Master and Blog Mates.

Appetizing Soup for Soul, feeling appeased

and a snack for all

-Sharpen your Tools - Sandwich

Rt Click here, select Open link in new tab


Yogavidya by Parimal Devnath said...

Namaste Master
Meditation, the key.

the doyen at DRL is no more.

SANPOT said...

Thank you Ilango Sir. Very useful for the current volatility in the market and total wellbeing of oneself.Meditation has the most beneficial and productive effects very easy to do and all this totally free BUT at the same time very difficult to do it consistently."My body felt blissful and I was at peace....for 4 seconds only", state of the Thoughtless Mind.....Pure Bliss.

SANPOT said...

And olly the self experience can teach you the powerful benefits of the thoughtless mind.
Thank you once again Sir.

HARISH TAHKKAR said...

No words to express excellency of teaching 5 days live market,
& one day how to leave life in king size.
For cosmic energy & life changing experience.
(1) Vipasana meditation center.
http://www.dhamma.org/
Find video link.If you have time for course, you have to stay there with cut off yourself from the world.No talk.no mobile,no computer,no news paper.only yoursef peeping into you.
(2) http://www.brahmakumaris.com/
Both are not connected with religions at all.

jay shah said...

Dear Sandeep Bhoiteji
Please can you mail me to the JNSAR details that you mentioned in the blog yesterday . I could not find your email address. Many thanks to you

durga said...

good morning master ,n to all blogmates.
WHAT I THINK IS A STUDENT WILL FOLLOW THE MASTER(teacher)
EVEN IF he doesn"t follow his parents.so now our master said it,yu got to follow it no matter wt comes,for HE knows wt is good for us.
BUDHHISTS call it ANA PANASATHI(vipassana).BRAHMAKUMARIS course is better to begin wth,and PYRAMID SPIRITUAL SOCIETY method is good for continuation.
OF ALL THE ORGANS the brain WHICH HOUSES THE mind,doesnt know intuitively what to do except for the FIGHT /FLIGHT RESPONSE
.SO yu need to train it ofcourse thru MEDITATION.THE GOVT NEED TO GIVE A SERIOUS THOUGHT TO START A COMPULSORY MEDITATION CLASS as 1st hour .and DRIIL as last hour....hope we will all sart from TOADAY.GOOD DAY

shriram said...

very nice article master !

Akash Patel said...

@master
good noon

in my college days i started meditation inspired by Swami Vivekanand Jivan Charitra, then what happened, each time i tried to became thoughtless more and more thoughts (even which i did not thought in routine life) started in mind!!! i tried it for one and half month, ultimately stop.

after a long time by reading your post will try it again.

you are simply a GEM and CHAMP

thanks.

Unknown said...

Dear Master

This article encouraged me to start meditation again which i started several times but failed.

Thanks & Regards

Billgates said...

Meditation/Conscious Breathing makes one more aware and mite help choose trades wisely.

Crorepathi said...

Worshiping Shiva is not religious act in India...(today's news)
This is what happens when a Vatican implant rules India, systematically eradicating Hinduism...
but nothing could stop for ages and cannot stop, as it's embedded in everyone's DNA
Listen Om Sivoham to feel your DNA resonating to the song.
p.s Enuogh is enough, lets start talking and donnot get cheated by secularism

Unknown said...

dinesh rishi ji mere ko delet kar diya kya uncle GMAIL pe?
Ekdam sa real baat sahan nahi hua dil se? kuch bhi galat to tha hi nahi na malik wo baato mei. chalo yaha nahi likhna chahta mei ... aapko open nahi karna hei. good wish you in your life. 2 type of faces you have tht i had seen.

Raman said...

One more thought provoking piece from then admirable source. I salute your variety & earnestness.

Manish said...

Goodevening master,

Guru ne kaha aur hum ne maana.

The meditation starts tomorrow morning for 5 mintutes to start with.

An inspiring article master....

Thanks n Regards Always...

Mangoman said...

These are the probable scene which will be witnessed in 2017 Monetary Review

RBI has reduced the CRR further and the CRR now stands at -3%. That means RBI will give an extra 3% of the banks total deposits to all the banks to overcome the liquidity issue.

SBI chairman Pramod Chapri so upset about RBI with the minus 3% CRR. He argues RBI should give unlimited money to the banks without any interest cost and the CRR itself is a idiotic banking practice followed centuries ago.

Repo Rate is reduced further and now stands at -4%. This means mango men ( You and me) have to pay 4% interest to keep your money in the bank deposit.

FICCI President Podi Godrej reportedly unhappy with RBI, that the repo rate is reduced only up to 4%. He wondered how industry will grow if the repo rate is -4. He wanted RBI to reduce the rates further.

Karthi Chidambaram ( he would become finance minister by then) expects RBI governor Ramarao to act responsibly to reduce rates further to -10%, so that poor Kumbani's and Jehindra's can eat atleast a square meal per day.

In a separate news, the CPI inflation touches 23% and the WPI inflation is at 12%. Taking note on this inflation figure PMEAC chairman sundarrajan says the WPI decreases by 0.00002% which actually gives room to RBI to cut the rates further. Further he noted that the price of jet engine reduces by 100%, which is what we need to look as a sign of cooling inflation.

Planning commission deputy Chamcha singh puts blame of rural people. He says rural people has become more arrogant these days and started eating decent food for 3 times per day which puts more pressure on the inflation. He also expressed dismay about the fact that poor people started drinking coffee everyday. He also says government is taking effective steps to arrest this trend.

Meanwhile real estate continues to thrive and the price of a single bedroom flat is 10 crore even though 100000 crores of apartments still vacant in the country.

NEVER GIVE UP said...

It's Really Nice Sir.

rajan said...

MANGOMAN@ its all lolz,nice.

rajan said...

respected illango sir,your todays post is again inspiring and rejevunating for our souls,my heartiest pranam to u .

rajiv malik said...

dear friends,

many of you closely track stocks. if someone is an expert on the following stocks-

Bhel,tisco,hindalco,voltas,bharat forge

pl enlighten as to is this the right time and level to buy them. i say this as right now all these above mentioned stocks are at their 52 week lows.

rajiv malik said...

businessline on nifty
Nifty (5,872.6)

The Nifty hit the high of 5,971 on Monday before reversing lower last week. The short-term support to watch out for now is at 5,781. If the Nifty manages to hold above this level, it can move higher to 5,981 or 5,999 in the upcoming sessions.

But decline below 5,781 can pull the stock lower to the recent trough at 5,663.

The quandary regarding the medium-term trend in the Nifty remains unresolved. Move below 5,781 would be an indication that the bearish scenario is unfolding with the possibility of a decline to 5,679 or 5,511 in the upcoming weeks.

The recent peak at 6,112 will continue to be a key medium-term hurdle for the index.

Dinesh Palanichamy said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
gkm223 said...

@ telegraph.co.uk :-LONDON - A hit imposed on Cypriot bank depositors by the euro zone has shocked and alarmed politicians and bankers who fear the currency bloc has set a precedent that will unnerve investors and citizens alike.

rajiv malik said...

over to twitter....cyprus problem

traderstewie ‏@traderstewie
You can tell everybody wants a pullback when cyprus causes a gap down! even more funny is i bet 90% of us Don't even know where's cyprus :-)

rajiv malik ‏@rajivhtc
@traderstewie so which means the gap down has to be bought. but at what nifty levels.what if one buys and then it slides again sharply.

rajiv malik said...

the cyprus rub off....
http://www.rajatkbose.com/recos.html

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